Georgians force to clean South Ossetia streets
Russian troops and their armed allies forced Georgian men to clean the streets of South Ossetia‘s bombed-out capital Saturday, avenging Georgia’s attack on the breakaway province a week ago.

“Labor even turns monkeys into humans,” said a Russian officer, who along with armed Ossetians escorted one group of about two dozen Georgians through the streets of the capital.

Bush said in a speech at his ranch in Crawford, Texas that the two regions, embroiled for the past two weeks in a bloody conflict between Russia and Georgia, are “a part of Georgia,” and “they will remain so.”